|
|
Lift the Cuban embargo
La Verdad
By Terra Lawson-Remer
United States foreign policy is central to the
life of every Cuban, enforcing the dearth of essentials and luxuries,
from medicine to cosmetics to automobiles. With the exception of Cuba, the
United States is the single largest trading partner of every Latin American
country. Clearly, hacking these ties would create an economic hemorrhage in any
Latin American nation. The U.S. embargo against Cuba, only mentioned in this
country between glimpses of unbuttoned trousers and political cockfights,
lacerates the Cuban people every day.
Although clothed in the rhetoric of freedom and democracy, the trade embargo
is fundamentally a tool of economic imperialism. When President Bill Clinton,
LAW '73, said that "the overarching goal of American policy must be to promote
a peaceful transition to democracy on the island [of Cuba]," he wasn't telling
the full truth. Clearly, Cuban-style democracy wouldn't qualify as "free" by
most definitions. Yet other nations with far worse human-rights records,
including Guatemala, China, Chile, and Indonesia, have received U.S. economic
and political support despite their atrocities. Hiding behind the rhetoric of
liberty in dealing with Cuba is supremely hypocritical. The real motive behind
U.S.-Cuban policy is economic imperialism, not democracy.
American involvement with Cuba dates back to the Spanish-American War, when
the United States forced Cuba to add an amendment to its constitution allowing
the U.S. to intervene in Cuba's internal affairs. Political imperialism
gradually gave way to economic imperialism. By the eve of the Cuban revolution,
foreign corporations, with the complicity of Fulgencio Batista's repressive
regime, owned the vast majority of Cuban assets. Consequently, the U.S. lent
covert military support to dictator Batista from 1957 to 1959 by sending
weapons and intelligence to fight Castro's rebel army. Even after the
revolutionaries came to power in 1959, the CIA continued to sponsor a
counter-revolutionary army within Cuba.
It's no wonder that in 1960, when the revolutionaries nationalized Cuba's
extensive wealth, they failed to compensate U.S. companies, while corporations
from nations that hadn't fought against the rebels were adequately paid. This
seizure of property was the primary reason for the Cuban embargo. As Michael
Ranneberger, the State Department's Coordinator for Cuban Affairs, said,"One of
the major reasons for the imposition of the embargo was the Cuban Government's
failure to compensate thousands of U.S. companies and individuals." In other
words, the embargo is the vestige of an imperialistic policy, dating from 1901,
which has been characterized by U.S.-backed dictators and the Bay of Pigs
fiasco.
Now that the "democracy defense" of the Cuban embargo has been exposed as a
farce, what is left to defenders of the status quo policy? Cuba remains a
communist nation, defying free trade laws, the trend toward global capitalism,
and the U.S. corporate appetite for profit. One could say, in the rhetoric of
the Cold War, that the U.S. is simply standing strong against the communist
menace 90 miles from our shore. Yet it seems evident that the small island off
the shore of Florida poses no security threat to the United States. More
importantly, communism has been good to the Cuban people.
The infant mortality rate in Cuba is one of the lowest in the world (12 per
1,000 live births). Life expectancy in Cuba far exceeds that in the rest of
Latin America (73.5 years as opposed to, for example, 64.3 years in Ecuador).
The illiteracy rate has declined from 25 percent of the population before the
revolution (mid-'50s) to 4 percent in the mid-'90s. It's important to note that
all this was achieved without the support of the U.S., the World Bank, or the
International Monetary Fund. Perhaps Soviet support until 1989 compensated for
the lack of global financial involvementbut it's doubtful. More importantly,
Cuban farm workers now have access to potable water, decent housing, education,
and health care at a rate almost unparalleled in the rest of Latin America.
Before the revolution, Cuba had a higher GNP, but it was concentrated in the
hands of the very rich. Today the wealth of Cuba benefits every Cuban.
Cuba is not an island paradise. Although the Cuban people have, on the whole,
benefited from communism, the system is currently close to collapse. This is
due primarily to the loss of its largest trading partner, the USSR, as well as
to inherent economic inefficiencies. The lack of a free democracy in Cuba also
remains an important issueit's impossible to support a system that denies
full freedom to its citizenry.
So what stance should the U.S. take toward Cuba? If we are truly interested in
freedom, democracy, and prosperity, we must consider the best interests of the
Cuban people. In order to regain prosperity and establish democracy, Cuba must
make the transition from a state-planned economy under Castro to a market
economy under a democratic government. This cannot happen as long as Castro and
communism are synonymous with anti-imperialismand they will remain synonymous
as long as the embargo is in place. Cuba will need the help of economists in
order to find a non-capitalist alternative to communism. While laissez-faire
capitalism would wipe out all the gains achieved under communism, a
non-capitalist market economy could create prosperity without poverty. It's
time to eschew the hackneyed rhetoric extolling the virtues of capitalism,
admit that communism has been far more beneficial to the majority of Cubans
than rampant capitalism was before the revolution, and lift the Cuban embargo.
Back to Opinion...
|